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Cleric At Pakistan's Red Mosque Agrees To Limited Talks
July 9, 2007 -- A Pakistani cleric under siege at Islamabad's Red Mosque has reportedly agreed to hold talks via loudspeaker in a bid to end the crisis.
Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said a seven-member negotiating team, headed by former Prime Minister Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain and including ministers and Islamic leaders, will try to persuade Abdul Rashid Ghazi to surrender and to free the women and children inside the mosque compound.
Aziz said "the team will negotiate through a speaker system so that all team members can hear whatever Ghazi says."
Aziz said the government is not sending a negotiating team inside the mosque.
Earlier today, gunfire erupted again near the mosque, as President Pervez Musharraf convened a high-level meeting on how to resolve a nearly weeklong standoff there with alleged terrorists. Pakistan's government says well-armed terrorists wanted for attacks in Pakistan and elsewhere are directing a determined defense against thousands of troops.
Pakistani Muslim clerics say they are making a final bid to avert an assault on the mosque, while authorities have issued what they say is a last warning for the gunmen to surrender.
The building has been surrounded by Pakistani government troops since July 3, when clashes broke out between armed student radicals and government forces.
Pakistani authorities say gunmen continue to hold many students, women, and children as hostages in the mosque. At least 24 people have been killed, including a senior Pakistani military officer.
(compiled from agency reports)
Copyright (c) 2007. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
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